Auto Admit Question

<p>What if you get accpeted around February but when high school ends (may or june) you are no longer in the top 8% (maybe dropped a couple of spots down) will the school take back your acceptance/revoke your admission?</p>

<p>I believe most students who qualify for automatic admission are notified and accepted to the University shortly after their application is submitted. So, once you get your decision, you can pay your deposit of 200 dollars and your spot is safe bearing extreme senioritis. </p>

<p>So, if you’re not in the top 8% at the end of your senior year, your transcript won’t arrive till mid June, and it might be a bit late to take away your acceptance. </p>

<p>I’m just going off what seems reasonable to me here, and have no idea how the Admissions Office deals with this manner. You might want to ask them directly as I doubt anyone on CC will have the answer you’re looking for.</p>

<p>They will not take away your acceptance if you slip out of the top 8%. If you make multiple F’s then they may consider dropping you but slipping out of the top 8% alone is not going to do anything if it’s at the end of the year after you have already been accepted.</p>

<p>I believe, UT accepts top 1%, top 2%, top 3% etc until they reach 75% of capacity. The rest of students who qualify for automatic admission can be offered CAP; or if they are minorities or students from top high schools with very strong SAT/ACT scores, they can be accepted through holistic review.</p>

<p>twentyone30
Why February? </p>

<p>Students who are accepted automatically (to UT, not necessary to major) are already notified. Students who are not notified by now will go through holistic review and may or may not be accepted (can be offered CAP).</p>

<p>If you are automatically accepted based on your Fall semester rank UT will not revoke admission if your rank drops. It’s just… If you are very close to the bottom %, not a minority, not the only one who submitted documents from your very underrepresented high school, or don’t have exceptional test scores, you might be offered CAP because 75% capacity will be already full.</p>